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Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Whitehouse.gov Remodeling Includes Larger Windows, More Doors

John Murrell

The change anticipated for so long by so many came quickly, just after noon in Washington. After centuries of struggle and halting progress, the nation was finally able to welcome … its first White House new media director.

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Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Aggregation, Aggravation, Litigation

John Murrell

There’s a fresh dust-up over news headline aggregation going on now in Massachusetts as yet another publisher, in a misguided effort to keep its content in a silo, tries to buck the very nature of the Web. GateHouse Media, which owns 125 local papers across the state, is suing the New York Times Co., parent of the Boston Globe, over the links to GateHouse stories from the Globe’s Web sites.

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Thursday, December 4, 2008

The Billion Mouse Mark and the Latest on Doug Engelbart’s Tale

John Murrell

Computer peripheral powerhouse Logitech is working to get some PR mileage out of a milestone event–since letting the first one scamper into the retail market in 1985, the company has now shipped one billion computer mice.

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Thursday, October 16, 2008

Obama Makes Play for Crucial Swing-State Gamer Vote

John Murrell

It will go down as a mere footnote in U.S. election history, but Barack Obama has become the first presidential candidate to buy billboard space in the virtual landscape of video games.

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Friday, August 29, 2008

Steve’s Fine, But Some of the Investors Needed CPR

John Murrell

I have nothing but deep collegial empathy for the folks at the Bloomberg financial newswire after they accidentally let their pre-prepared Steve Jobs obituary slip momentarily onto the Web yesterday. The sophisticated publishing systems used in newsrooms today have many advantages, but they can also disrupt the old-fashioned, linear workflow with its series of checkpoints [...]

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Thursday, July 24, 2008

Google Lets Knol Edge Out the Door

John Murrell

After six months of testing, Google is letting the public start using Knol, its effort to build an authoritative reference out of user contributions. When it was announced late last year, Knol sounded like a cross between the anyone-can-edit give and take of Wikipedia and the individual contributions of expertise found on Squidoo, and that’s [...]

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Wednesday, July 2, 2008

VCs Looking for Roadside Assistance After Start-Up Engine Stalls

John Murrell

Here’s all you need to know about the current sad state of the venture capital business: For the first time in 30 years, a fiscal quarter ended Monday without a single initial public offering for a venture-backed firm. Not a one. The machinery that, at its best, nurtures innovative businesses into viability (and at its worst blows money on overhyped fads) has ground to a halt.

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Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Side Effects of Reading Google Health’s TOS May Include Queasiness

John Murrell

The long-awaited Google Health site made its beta debut Monday as the search sovereign’s answer to bringing personal medical records out of the Dark Ages, and like all of Google’s projects, its value is directly linked to your level of trust.

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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

News Via Twitter–Now You Can Feel Saddened and Powerless Sooner

John Murrell

The fans of microblogging service Twitter, led by head cheerleader Robert Scoble, were all aflutter Monday with the sense that in speedily passing along word of this morning’s earthquake in China, they have participated in a news reporting revolution. Seems Scoble started getting and forwarding tweets from China even as the ground was still shaking, an entire minute or two before the USGS posted preliminary data on location and strength, and more minutes before the bulletins started moving on the news wires.

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Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Google to FCC: Verizon Is Mucking Up Our Cunning Plan

John Murrell

When last we looked after the big 700 MHz spectrum auction wrapped up in March, Team Google was congratulating itself for successfully winning open-access requirements for the desirable “C Block” without actually having to spend billions of dollars, clearing a path for devices powered by its open Android platform even though Verizon Wireless won those airwaves. The search sovereign should have known it wasn’t going to be that easy.

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Thursday, May 1, 2008

And to Think We Might Have Been Surfing the Grand Global Gopher

John Murrell

It could easily have gone differently. Fifteen years ago, the management of the CERN physics lab in Geneva could have decided that this World Wide Web thing that researcher Tim Berners-Lee was working on might have some proprietary value down the road and put it under lock, key and license. But they didn’t. Fifteen years ago today, they put it into the public domain and changed history. Of the many Web milestones we celebrate, that makes this one special.

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Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Comcast Seeking New Technology to Throttle FCC Head

John Murrell

I hate to break this to you and risk damaging the relationship of trust and faith that you have with your cable company, but according to FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, Comcast has not been totally forthright in describing its handling of bandwidth-sucking BitTorrent transfers of large media files. Ever since it was caught using surreptitious, hacker-like techniques to interrupt such activity, the cable giant has claimed that it was simply exercising sound network management practices to ensure decent service for all, and that the throttling was applied only in times of high network congestion. Tuesday, Martin told a Senate committee that his agency’s ongoing investigation indicated otherwise.

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Friday, April 18, 2008

Get Used to It, Cellphone Chatters–You’re the New Smokers

John Murrell

The backlash is slowly building. The public disapproval is getting more vocal. Governments are starting to step in, imposing regulation and segregation. Soon the targeted demographic will be pushed out of public spaces, quarantined in restricted areas with others of their kind who insist on keeping up their disgusting habit. Freedoms taken for granted will be constrained. All this because of the outcry over second-hand conversation. We need only to look across the pond for fresh evidence that the tide is turning against those who hold their private phone calls in the middle of a crowd, especially a crowd confined on public transportation.

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Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Census Bureau Decides It Can’t Count on Computers

John Murrell

This is just pitiful. As a taxpayer, and especially as a Silicon Valley taxpayer, it rankles me no end to see yet another government technology initiative botched up because the people in charge are out of their depth. Now it’s happened again, this time with the Census Bureau’s plans to bring its tallying tech at least into the 20th century, if not the 21st.

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